After two weeks of Cobb early voting, 25K+ ballots cast

After the first two weeks of early voting in Cobb in the 2022 primary elections, more than 25,000 ballots have been cast.Georgia runoff elections

Pending totals from Saturday—the last weekend day of early voting—there have been 25,223 in-person votes that have been counted at all locations.

Of those, there have been 15,119 Republican ballots, 9,796 Democratic ballots and 308 non-partisan ballots.

Another 2,455 absentee ballots have been accepted, out of 8,130 issued and 2,536 returned.

In-person turnout has been strong at the two early voting locations in East Cobb.

A total of 5,478 votes have been cast at the East Cobb Government Center, the highest of any location. Of those votes, 3,621 are Republican, 1,757 Democratic and 100 non-partisan.

At the Tim D. Lee Senior Center, there have been 2,076 Republican ballots, 774 Democratic and 14 non-partisan for 2,864 votes.

This week’s turnout was a bit higher than the first week, with more than 12,000 votes cast in person.

In addition to local, state and federal races and cityhood referendums in East Cobb, Lost Mountain and Vinings, voters are being asked non-binding questions on the Democratic and Republican ballots.

The May 24 primaries are being conducted with new boundaries for Congressional, legislative and county and city elected offices, due to redistricting following the 2020 Census.

Cobb Elections is sending out more than 500,000 cards to voters indicating which races they will be able to vote in.

Cobb government said if you don’t get your new card before voting, you can check those races by logging into your “My Voter” page at the Georgia Secretary of State’s website.

The last week of early voting is Monday-Friday, May 16-20 from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. There will not be any early voting next Saturday, May 21.

The Cobb Elections office is estimating wait times at each early voting station with an interactive map that can be found here.

Registered voters can vote in advance at any designated location in the county.

Election Day voting in the primaries will take place May 24 from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., and voters will report to their regular precincts.

Friday was the deadline for requesting absentee ballots. They can be returned via standard mail but must be received at the Cobb Elections office by 7 p.m. May 24, when the polls close.

If you wish to drop off your ballot in person, there are drop boxes at the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road) and the Tim D. Lee Center (3332 Sandy Plains Road) that will be available during early voting hours only.

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East Cobb suspect arrested following wave of home burglaries

Cobb Police have arrested a man they say committed a home burglary in an affluent neighborhood in East Cobb last week, and as they and Marietta Police continue to investigate similar incidents.Northeast Cobb car crash, Cops on Donut Shops

Armando Casa-Rojas, of Argentina, has been charged with first-degree burglary following a burglary at a home off Old Canton Road near Roswell Road last Friday, according to an arrest warrant.

The warrant states that last Friday, May 6, around 9:30 p.m., Casa-Rojas broke into a home by breaking a window in the back, then locating and breaking open a safe.

The warrant also said that the suspect had four pry bars, a flashlight, a head lamp, a window punch and a pair of gloves inside a back pack.

Police were called to the scene and Casa-Rojas tried to get away, but he was apprehended by the police, according to the warrant.

He also has been charged with felony possession of tools for the commission of a crime and willful obstruction of a law enforcement officer.

According to Cobb Sheriff’s Office records, Casa-Rojas was booked in the Cobb County Adult Detention Center and remains there without bond.

Police have said they are investigating seven other similar burglaries, where homes are broken into at night and with no one home, targeting expensive homes and seeking items in safes, cash, jewelry and weapons.

They’ve said an organized, sophisticated burglary crew or crews have been operating in metro Atlanta in recent months. No other arrests have been made.

The arrest warrant for Casa-Rojas doesn’t state what items were taken from the home in East Cobb.

Cobb Police are encouraging homeowners to observe the following safety tips:

  • Lock your doors, including the one from the garage into the home.
  • Keep garage doors closed.
  • Use motion-sensor-activated exterior lighting.
  • Use surveillance cameras (they can be registered with the Cobb Police camera registry.
  • Turn on your audible alarm system if you have one.
  • Report suspicious persons and vehicles in your neighborhood.
Precinct 4 in East Cobb has a criminal investigations unit that investigates thefts and burglaries. For information call 770-499-4184.

Ga. Democratic, GOP voters asked charged ballot questions

Cobb absentee ballot drop boxes
On their primary ballots, Democratic and Republican voters will be asked about a number of voter-related questions, including absentee drop boxes.

Voters in the Georgia primaries this month will be asked several questions on hot-button issues that have galvanized party politics in the Democratic and Republican parties, both in the state and across the country.

Those subjects include same-day voter registration, paid parental leave, expansion of Medicaid, eliminating student loan debt and legalizing marijuana on the Democratic ballot.

Republican voters will be asked about U.S. border security, education vouchers, transgender athletes in high school sports, free speech in political campaigns, eliminating absentee ballot drop boxes and Buckhead cityhood.

The questions were placed on the ballots by the respective state party organizations.

They’re the only entities allowed to place such questions on ballots, and they are non-binding.

The results are used by the parties to shape messaging and to collect information.

Some of the questions on the Republican Party ballot

Here are generic Cobb sample ballots, including the ballot questions: Democratic | Republican

(If you are choosing a non-partisan ballot, which is limited to judicial races, you will not get any ballot questions, unless you live within the proposed boundaries spelled out in the East Cobb, Lost Mountain and Vinings cityhood referendums.)

But this year, some of the party ballot questions touch on volatile cultural and spending topics.

The transgender athlete question comes after the Republican-dominated legislature couldn’t pass a bill requiring high school athletes to compete with the sex of their birth.

Another bill passed this year gave that authority to the Georgia High School Association, the governing body for high school athletics. On May 4, the GHSA’s executive committee, by a 62-0 vote, changed its bylaws to bar transgender athletes from competing along gender identity lines.

Similar bills have been passed or introduced in states with GOP control, after female-identified males have been allowed to compete recently in the Olympics and the National Collegiate Athletic Association.

Republican voters also will be asked if education funding should “follow a student that best fits their need: whether it is public, private, magnet, charter, virtual or homeschool?”

Democratic elected officials across the country have been advocating for forgiving student loan debt, and that question is on the Georgia primary ballot, with the language contending that it’s to “remove obstacles to economic development.”

Democratic voters also will be asked if marijuana should be legalized and regulated, similar to alcohol, for consumers aged 21 and over, with tax revenues to fund education, health care and infrastructure.

A sampling of the Democratic Party ballot questions

After contentious claims in the last two elections in Georgia about voter access, both the Democratic and Republican ballots again will have related questions.

In the 2020 elections, outdoor drop boxes were installed at various locations in Cobb and Georgia to collect absentee ballots.

Republicans claimed that encouraged “illegal ballot trafficking,” which is language included on the primary ballot in a question asking if they should be eliminated altogether.

The legislature passed a bill this year requiring drop boxes to be located inside an elections office or early voting location during opening hours only.

Democrats generally have had better absentee turnout, but Republicans tend to have stronger Election Day response.

The Democratic ballot asks if Georgia voters should be able to gather signatures to “directly place questions on the ballot” and if early voting should be expanded and same-day registration be established.

Democrats also will be asked if they are in favor of having “secure” drop boxes “accessible at all times, through Election Day.”

To get a sample ballot customized for you, click here.

Early voting continues Saturday and Monday-Friday next week.

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East Cobb Food Scores: Peace Love and Pizza; Willy’s Mexicana; more

Peace Love and Pizza, East Cobb food scores

The following East Cobb food scores for the week of May 9 have been compiled by the Cobb & Douglas Department of Public Health. Click the link under each listing for inspection details:

Hikaru Ramen
2014 Powers Ferry Road, Suite 400-A
May 10, 2022 Score: 94, Grade: A

Legacy Ridge at Marietta
840 LeCroy Drive
May 13, 2022 Score: 96, Grade: A

Peace Love & Pizza
1050 E. Piedmont Road, Suite 154
May 10, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

Willy’s Mexicana Grill
4250 Roswell Road, Suite 120
May 10, 2022 Score: 100, Grade: A

What’s For Lunch
2995 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 440
May 13, 2022 Score: 97, Grade: A

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Georgia Symphony Orchestra announces 2022-23 schedule

GSO sensory-friendly concert

The Marietta-based Georgia Symphony Orchestra will perform the works of Gustav Mahler, Peter Tchaikovsky and Giuseppe Verdi during its 2022-23 season opener in September.

The GSO released its season schedule this week, starting with the “Brass Splash” concert Sept. 10-11, to be led by GSO Music Director and Conductor Timothy Verville.

Other concert series performances will take place in February and May of 2023.

The season finale features “Carmina Burana” by Carl Orff, as well as works by Johannes Brahms and Claude Debussy.

There will be a special choral performance for children, “Walk Together Children,” in October, and “Holiday Pops” concerts in early December.

The GSO is also adding sensory friendly shows in October and April that include an instrument “petting zoo” and a quiet room.

The orchestra’s jazz ensemble will be in action with two performances at the Earl Smith Strand Theatre in Marietta in February and April, the GSO’s Youth Symphony will perform in October, December, February, March and May.

Other performances will take place either at the Marietta High School Performing Arts Center or the Dr. Bobbie Bailey and Family Performance Center at Kennesaw State University.

For more details on all the GSO season concert series, including subscription packages that will go on sale June 13, please click here. Individual tickets will go on sale July 25 and can be purchased by clicking here.

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East Cobb real estate sales for the week of April 25, 2022

730 Summit Terrace, Indian Hills, East Cobb real estate sales
Indian Hills

The following deeds for residential East Cobb real estate sales were filed April 25-29 with the Cobb Superior Court Clerk’s Office Real Estate Department.

The addresses include ZIP Codes and the subdivision names and high school districts are in parenthesis:

April 25

6 Rhodes Drive, 30068 (East Valley Estates, Wheeler): Andres Gill to Jordan and Jane Fernie; $425,000

1452 Shadowbrook Drive, 30062 (Briarwood Hills, Wheeler): Reina and Eloy Fernandez to Andrew Newman and Elizabeth Aldridge; $420,000

3785 Creekview Drive, 30068 (Indian Hills, Walton): The Raymond Russell Walkup Revocable Trust to Kevin Heuer and Stephanie Lynne; $1.7 million

730 Summit Terrace, 30068 (Indian Hills, Walton): Alan Parker Homes to Peter and Lisa Card; $1.5 million

3015 Asheton Place, 30068 (Ashebrooke, Walton): Dennis Doherty to Kayla and Stephen Callaway; $735,000

1508 Keener Lane, 30066 (Romans Ridge, Sprayberry): Lot One Homes of Georgia LLC to Paige and John Koob; $625,252

1966 Chartwell Court, 30066 (Churchill Falls, Lassiter): OpenDoor Property Trust to Ashley and Austin Barreras; $421,000

April 26

4209 N. Mountain Road, 30066 (Highland Pointe, Lassiter): Seth Thomas Weisman, trustee, Seth Weissman Revocable Trust to Trisha Broussard: $570,000

4208 Keheley Road, 30066 (Kell): Dennis O’Connell, executor, last will and testament of Donna O’Connell; to Michael and Dawn Curzio; $378,000

3308 Stillbrook Pass, 30062 (Glenmoor, Pope): Open House Atlanta Realty & Investments to Hokkaido Wine Co. Ltd.; $605,000

3533 Tritt Springs Way, 30062 (Post Oak Springs, Pope): OpenDoor Property LLC to Juan Wei; $489,000

3042 Alberta Drive, 30062 (Holly Springs, Sprayberry): Open House Atlanta Realty & Investments to Fukiage Co. Ltd.; $484,000

2358 Marneil Drive, 30062 (Hampshire Place, Sprayberry): Open House Atlanta Realty & Investments to Tatsuya Takenami; $459,000

April 27

5178 Sandlewood Court, 30068 (Tally Green, Walton): to David Limberg and Adriana Ballesteros; $687,500

3215 Belford Drive, 30066 (Chaucer Place, Sprayberry): Kilsun Kim Hogue to Fabiane and Olga Calderon; $525,000

2041 Abode Way, 30066 (Courtyards at Ebenezer, Sprayberry): Traton LLC to Ashraf Sara Moore and Ray Gregory; $642,793

121 Flatwood Trail Unit 22, 30066 (Barrett Creek Townhomes, Sprayberry): Sonia Romaine to Jeffrey Bradley Vincent; $349,000

21 Jekyll Drive Unit 9, 30066 (Barrett Creek Townhomes, Sprayberry): Yashawanatray Patil to OpenDoor Property Trust; $330,800

2253 Snug Harbor, 30066 (St. Charles Square, Sprayberry): David Bratcher to Geoffrey and Amy Jacoby; $542,000

April 28

4550 Eastwood Trail, 30068 (The Parc at Woodlawn, Walton): D.J. Homes Inc. to Meghan and Jabar Smith; $1.3 million

1505 Huntingford Drive, 30068 (Walton): David Orrico to Tamara and Paul Poppert; $1.7 million

5543 Woodberry Circle, 30068 (Willow Point, Walton): Melissa Reed to Lindsey and Zachery Williams; $652,500

405 Arnold Drive, 30066 (Kingswood Estates, Sprayberry): Mike Cantrell to Oscar de los Santos and Mariel Bustamente; $255,000

1996 Cason Drive, 30066 (Kingswood Estates, Sprayberry): Lauren Cantrell to Julio Nito and Ofelia Hernandez; $270,000

4001 Oak Forest Circle, 30068 (Oakhill Manor, Walton): Alan Parker Homes LLC to Naushin Laila and Kazi Nahid; $1.432 million

April 29

64 Robyn Way, 30062 (Heartwood, Pope): James McDaniel to Annlynn Harris; $448,000

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Wheeler HS student from Troop 772 becomes Eagle Scout

Egan Donley, Eagle Scout, Troop 772

Cathy Donley, the mother of Wheeler High School student Egan Donley, sent in the following information about her son becoming an Eagle Scout.

He’s a member of Troop 772 at John Knox Presbyterian Church. For his service project, Egan  designed and constructed a 20-foot pedestrian bridge at the Gold Branch Trail in the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area.

She said during his time as a scout, he has earned earned 35 merit badges, served as a Senior Patrol Leader, received the Order of the Arrow, and attained the scouting “triple crown” by completing treks at three high adventure camps: Sea Base (Florida Keys), The Summit (West Virginia), and Philmont (New Mexico).

Egan also has worked as an archery instructor at Bert Adams Scout Camp for the past three summers and will continue as field sports director this summer.

He also has been active in competitive school and community robotics teams at Wheeler, and has plans to study mechanical engineering at Virginia Tech.

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East Cobb Weekend Events: Marietta Greek Festival; Art Show; more

Marietta Greek Festival

Another signature East Cobb event is back to its pre-COVID-19 format.

The Marietta Greek Festival returns for a full in-person celebration Friday-Sunday at Holy Transfiguration Greek Orthodox Church (3431 Trickum Road), with food, live music and dancing, sanctuary tours, kids’ activities and more.

Admission is $5 per person; children under 12 are free. The festival website has online ticket packages that include free admission and other coupons. Festival hours are 4-10 Friday, 11-10 Saturday and 11-4 Sunday.

Parking is available at Simpson Middle School (3440 Trickum Road) starting after 5 p.m. Friday; Mountain View Elementary School (3151 Sandy Plains Road) starting after 6 p.m. Friday and the Church of Latter-Day Saints (3195 Trickum Road) Friday-Saturday only. Shuttle service will be provided.

The first-ever We CARE Veterans Resource Fair is Friday and Saturday at the Cobb Civic Center, presented by the East Cobb-based United Military Care. More than 100 vendors will provide information, assistance and resources for health care, benefits, food assistance and access to other basic services.

Two Quilts of Valor presentations will take place on Friday at 11:30 in the Canteen, honoring a Post 9/11 Veteran Public Figure and Vietnam Veteran.

Admission is free to veterans and their families; the hours are 9-5 both days. (546 S. Marietta Parkway)

The Roswell Fine Arts Alliance is coming to East Cobb’s Hyde Farm Saturday for what it’s calling the “heART of the FARM Art Show,” emphasizing the 1830s-era working farm and its natural landscape.

There will be tours of the farm, a Plein Air painting demonstration, kids’ activities and a display of original artworks. The event is free to all and takes place from 10-3 (726 Hyde Road).

CenterStage North, one of Cobb County’s oldest community theatres, is starting its run of “I Hate Hamlet,” a Paul Rudnick play, starting Friday through next Saturday, May 21 at The Art Place-Mountain View.

It’s the story of a TV star who’s torn about preparing to play a Shakesperean actor, and whose muse, in the figure of John Barrymore, stays by his side until he takes the stage. The protagonist is forced to confront who he wants to be, or not to be.

Shows run nightly from 8-10 except for Sunday, when the curtains lift at 2 p.m. Tickets are $12-$25 (3330 Sandy Plains Road).

On Sunday, the Cobb Wind Symphony will be performing at the Lassiter Concert Hall (2601 Shallowford Road). The community orchestra’s rendition of “Carmen” features Christina Smith, Principal Flute of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra.

Admission is free but donations are accepted.

We’re back to compiling calendar listings in one handy place on our site. If you have events to share with the public, please e-mail: calendar@eastcobbnews.com and we will post them here.

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East Cobb Cityhood group decries ‘cancel culture attack’ on founder

Owen Brown, East Cobb Cityhood

The Committee for East Cobb Cityhood is pushing back against allegations by cityhood opponents that the group’s founder, a commercial real estate executive, stands to benefit personally from incorporation.

Owen Brown, the founder of the Retail Planning Corp. that manages metro Atlanta shopping centers—including Paper Mill Village and Woodlawn Square in East Cobb—has been the subject of frequent speculation since the original cityhood effort in 2018 that he’s pushing cityhood for his own development interests.

In an e-mail message sent Wednesday morning, the committee accused the East Cobb Alliance, which opposes cityhood, of creating “a cancel culture attack [emphasis original] on long-term Cobb Native and East Cobb business owner Owen Brown. They have spun up a conspiracy theory that Mr. Brown is a ‘developer’ out for financial gain in East Cobb.”

The Alliance held public information sessions in March as the May 24 cityhood referendum campaign began, and suggested that citizens “follow the money” of development interests that it said were remaining in the background.

Brown was mentioned by name, and Cityhood foes have suggested at debates that a City of East Cobb, which would have a tax base that’s more than 90 percent residential, would have to turn to high-density redevelopment to boost revenues.

The East Cobb Cityhood message on Wednesday said that Brown “has spent over 40 years in Cobb County, raising his family and contributing to our county.”

Because of his retail management background, “he is uniquely positioned to understand the trends in development and the negative impact of high-density residential development on our schools, traffic, and community.”

The cityhood group recently posted three video clips of an interview with Brown and committee member Sarah Haas (you can view them by clicking here).

They’re some of Brown’s first public comments on the East Cobb cityhood effort that he and several others began in 2018.

He formerly was the treasurer of the group but is no longer listed in an official capacity. Some of the initial meetings were held at his Retail Planning offices at Paper Mill Village.

Among those taking part was Joe O’Connor, an East Cobb resident served on an ad hoc citizens panel examining the initial cityhood financial study. When he asked for clarity on  who was pushing for East Cobb cityhood, O’Connor said he was told it was none of his business.

At the time, only Brown and Joe Gavalis, an Atlanta Country Club-area resident, were publicly identified. O’Connor resigned in December 2018, citing a lack of transparency.

In the new videos, Brown said what prompted his interest in cityhood was a conversation with former Cobb commissioner Bob Ott about a significant shortage of police officers in the area.

When he talked to the mayor of Milton—which became a city in 2006—Brown said he was told that community went from having 15 Fulton County officers to 60 in a new Milton police force and has had no tax increases.

“That exploded in my head,” Brown said. “That’s got what me thinking about the city of East Cobb.”

But the initial cityhood effort fizzled in East Cobb toward the end of 2019, after community and political opposition emerged.

A renewed cityhood push in early 2021 focused on planning and zoning, pointing to high-density zoning decisions elsewhere in the county that have sparked cityhood movements in Lost Mountain and Vinings (where also will have May 24 referendums).

Brown referenced the new MarketPlace Terrell Mill development on Powers Ferry Road, anchored by a Kroger superstore but also featuring a large apartment building.

“I don’t want that in East Cobb,” he said, denying that he has any interest in development projects in a potential city.

“I’m 75 next month; I’m doing this for my kids and grandkids,” Brown told Haas.

Police, fire and 911 services were added to the proposed services provided by a City of East Cobb late last year, but that subject also wasn’t raised in the cityhood group’s videos with Brown.

In late April, the East Cobb Alliance sent out an e-mail saying the East Cobb financial feasibility study has “faulty math” that could prompt additional taxes and fees to pay for city services.

“There’s a lemon law for buying a car in Georgia, but no lemon law for forming a city. You’re stuck. There is no reversal back to being unincorporated,” the Alliance e-mail read.

The Alliance also repeated claims in a recent social media posting that the East Cobb feasibility studies, both conducted by Georgia State University researchers, “were paid for out of secretly-sourced funds” through 501(c) organizations “that do not have to disclose who donated what amount.”

In one of the cityhood video clips, Brown said that he and several others paid for the initial $36,000 financial feasibility study. He didn’t identify the others; Cityhood committee representatives asked for public support to fund the 2021 study but haven’t released financials.

“We didn’t want to solicit people if it didn’t work,” Brown said of the 2018 study. “We would just drop it and walk away.”

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4 East Cobb students earn $2.5K National Merit Scholarships

The National Merit Scholarship Corporation has awarded $2,500 scholarships to students nationwide, including four from high schools in East Cobb. East Cobb National Merit Scholarship Program

According to a press release, the recipients are “finalists in each state judged to have the strongest combination of accomplishments, skills, and potential for success in rigorous college studies. The number of winners named in each state is proportional to the state’s percentage of the nation’s graduating high school seniors.”

It’s the second of four rounds of scholarship announcements for the Class of 2022, and the funding comes from the National Merit Scholarship Corporation’s own funds.

Future recipients will be announced in June.

The $2,500 scholarship recipients from East Cobb schools are as follows:

  • Chinmay P. Joshi, Walton High School—Probable career field: Medicine
  • Aadi Katta, Walton High School—Probable career field: Computer Science
  • Satya S. Tetali, Wheeler High School—Probable career field: Biochemistry
  • Oluwaseminire A. Oloyede, Pope High School—Probable career field: Medicine

For more information on the National Merit Scholarship program, click here.

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U.S. News ranks 6 East Cobb high schools among nation’s best

Lassiter High School graduation rate

All six high schools in the East Cobb area have been ranked among the top 40 percent nationally by U.S. News and World Report, which released its annual Best High Schools marks last week.

The Cobb County School District said in a release that 13 of its high schools are in the top 40 percent of more than 18,000 schools nationwide.

Walton High School is ranked No. 2 in metro Atlanta, No. 4 in Georgia and No. 174 in the country.

Lassiter High School comes in at No. 7 in metro Atlanta and No. 10 in the state, while Pope is No. 16 in metro Atlanta and No. 20 in Georgia.

Wheeler High School is ranked No. 34 in metro Atlanta and No. 42 in Georgia, while Sprayberry is at No. 57 in Metro Atlanta and No. 69 in Georgia.

Kell High School is ranked No. 61 in metro Atlanta and No. 75 in Georgia.

The rankings were developed based on graduation rates, test scores and college readiness metrics, among other factors.

All 16 of Cobb’s traditional high schools were recently named AP Honor Schools by the Georgia Department of Education.

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New Cobb Police Chief ‘humbled, but burdened’ by appointment

Cobb Police Chief VanHoozer

When he was hired as a Cobb Police officer in 1990, Stuart VanHoozer said he never thought he would move up the ranks to chief.

It wasn’t something a young man without a military or higher education background ever thought about, living in a basement in Mableton as he took on his first assignment as an officer on a beat, making $5.25 an hour.

“From there I fell in love with this job,” VanHoozer said Tuesday as he was introduced as the new Cobb Police Chief.

After a varied 32-year career in which he served as a patrol officer, heading up narcotics and internal affairs units, a commander at three precincts and most recently, as a deputy chief and interim co-chief, VanHoozer’s appointment was approved in a 5-0 vote of the Cobb Board of Commissioners.

He succeeds Tim Cox, who retired at the end of 2021.

“I came from pretty much nothing,” VanHoozer said in a press conference after the meeting. “All you have to do is be willing to do something great for your community.”

VanHoozer was one of four candidates formally interviewed from an initial applicant pool of 50, and his name was on a final list of three submitted to Cobb commissioners.

County Manager Jackie McMorris recommended him as the sole finalist.

VanHoozer said he was “humbled, but burdened” by his new role, and pledged that “nobody will work harder.”

VanHoozer and his fellow deputy chief Scott Hamilton have been juggling co-interim chief duties since January.

Since 2018, VanHoozer has been a deputy chief, in charge of implementing technology such as facial recognition and license-plate readers.

But intangible qualities were referenced by county leaders who spoke at the introduction.

“One of the things that captivated us was just his general empathy for everyone,” said Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid, who referenced her relationship with him when she represented District 4 in South Cobb.

“He cares about those he serves with and the badge that he wears.”

During heartfelt remarks after his introduction, VanHoozer talked about regular visits he would make to a child care center in South Cobb during his time as the Precinct 2 commander.

The child care center, located across the street from a shopping center known for criminal activity, especially drug-dealing, had been struck by stray bullets.

VanHoozer said he would hug some of the students and look at the bullet holes.

“All I could think about [when] I was commander of that precinct was that nothing can happen to those children while I am here,” he said.

VanHoozer touted his officers, who do what they do “without a whole lot of recognition in most areas,” noting activities behind the scenes, such as buying bicycles for kids and presenting Christmas gifts to children in need.

He also commended community leaders, including some from Austell who recognized police and law enforcement officers earlier in Tuesday’s meeting.

“We need help,” VanHoozer said, referring to open positions for officers. “We want people who are willing to bring their brains and minds together to make Cobb County safer, and to make Cobb County better.”

You can watch the full introductory press conference below.

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Sinkhole prompts emergency lane closure on Sandy Plains Road

Sandy Plains Road sinkhole closure

UPDATED WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 12:26 P.M.:

“Crews worked overnight to repair damage caused by a sinkhole on Sandy Plains Road at Wood Creek Drive. Some northbound lanes remain closed today as workers replace the curb and gutters for that stretch of the road.

“All lane closures will be removed before 5:00 pm.”

ORIGINAL REPORT:

This just in from Cobb County government:

“The discovery of a sinkhole during routine resurfacing work on Sandy Plains has forced crews to close a northbound lane at Wood Creek Drive to make repairs. This is on Sandy Plains between Wigley and Wesley Chapel. The closure will remain in effect through the rush hour tonight and into Wednesday.”

“We apologize for any inconvenience.”

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Cobb approves land purchase to relocate Fire Station 20

Cobb Fire Station 20
Cobb Fire Station 20 has operated on Sewell Mill Road since 1984.

The Cobb Board of Commissioners on Tuesday approved spending $975,000 to purchase around 3.5 acres of land on Sewell Mill Road at East Piedmont Road for the relocation of Fire Station 20.

The measure was passed on the commission’s consent agenda.

According to an agenda item, the Cobb Fire Department eventually wants to replace the current station at 1298 Hilton Drive—on Sewell Mill Road between East Piedmont and Old Canton Road—that was built in 1984.

That’s eight-tenths of a mile to the west of the property for the potential new site that has owned by the McCleskey Family-East Cobb YMCA.

“To meet response needs and Fire Department’s strategic goals, this station will need to be relocated,” the agenda item states. “While the station construction will not begin immediately, this parcel of land at Sewell Mill Road and East Piedmont intersection is an ideal location for the future station.”

The item also states that the funding for the property acquisition will come from the Cobb Fire Fund, and construction of the new station would commence “in a future budget cycle.”

Last year commissioners rejected a rezoning request for those parcels to become a residential senior living development.

Fire Station 20 has been mentioned in the current East Cobb Cityhood referendum campaign.

Although located in what would remain unincorporated Cobb, Station 20’s current service area includes neighborhoods that are included in the proposed City of East Cobb.

The proposed city would have two fire stations—currently Cobb 15 and 21.

Cobb Fire officials have said at county-sponsored cityhood town halls that slower response times are likely in the City of East Cobb, but a financial feasibility study didn’t provide enough details.

The Committee for East Cobb Cityhood has worked up a page with fire and emergency services information in part to counter a cityhood page created by Cobb government that cityhood leaders includes misleading information.

Last week, Cobb government launched a “World Class” web page to tout the Cobb Fire Department on its 50th anniversary.

The East Cobb cityhood group protested, sending out a letter last week alleging the county is actively campaigning against cityhood and demanding those activities stop.

The letter included a reference to an “audacious” sign posted in front of Fire Station 21, which is part of the East Cobb Government Service Center.

That’s where early voting is taking place through May 20.

“Because the Cityhood referendum is on the ballot in that very building, the sign is an illegal piece of campaign material that must be removed at once,” stated the letter to Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid. “It is no coincidence that the only fire station with such a sign as of May 4, 2022 is the one where early voting is occurring.”

When East Cobb News drove by Station 20 on Friday to take the above photo for this story, the same sign had been placed there.

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More than 12K ballots cast in first week of Cobb early voting

Republican voters turned out in strong numbers during the first week of early voting in the 2022 primary elections and cityhood referendums in Cobb County last week.Georgia runoff elections

After the first six days, including last Saturday, Cobb Elections reported that 7,350 voters cast ballots in the GOP primary, and 4,646 in the Democratic primary.

A total of 176 voters chose the non-partisan ballot, which is limited to judicial candidates.

During the primaries voters must choose one of the three ballots.

Here are the sample ballots for each:

The sample ballots above are countywide; to get a sample ballot customized for you, and to check which races you will be able to vote in, click here.

Voters who live in the proposed City of East Cobb will get the referendum on their ballot regardless of which one they choose.

Cobb Elections said that 1,845 Republican ballots were cast at the East Cobb Government Service Center (4400 Lower Roswell Road), while there were 877 Democratic ballots and 58 non-partisan.

At the Tim D. Lee Senior Center (3332 Sandy Plains Road), there were 1,024 Republican ballots during the first week, along with 378 Democratic ballots and 9 non-partisan.

Early voting continues this week at those locations and several others around the county from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday-Friday and 9-5 Saturday.

The last week of early voting is May 16-20 from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

The Cobb Elections office is estimating wait times at each early voting station with an interactive map that can be found here.

When you click the information icon in the upper-right corner you’ll find a color-coded legend explaining the wait times and other information.

The wait-time interactive map is periodically updated each day by the poll manager at each location.

If you wish to vote via absentee ballot, you have through Friday to request one, and you can do that by clicking here.

If you wish to drop off your ballot in person, there are drop boxes at the East Cobb Government Service Center and the Tim D. Lee Center that will be available during early voting hours only.

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Commissioner Richardson postpones East Cobb town hall

Cobb commissioner Jerica Richardson’s office said Monday that her scheduled town hall meeting Tuesday night at the Sewell Mill Library and Cultural Center is being postponed.Cobb Commissioner Jerica Richardson

Aliye Korucu, Richardson’s administrative assistant, didn’t give a reason beyond saying it was an “unforeseen circumstance.”

According to her website Richardson was planning to go over her 2022 policy agenda, following what she calls her “Priorities Tour” of community meetings.

She said that “we will send out the new date, time, and location as soon as we have everything set.”

Richardson has been holding quarterly town hall meetings across District 2, which includes some of East Cobb as well as the Cumberland-Vinings Smyrna area.

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Cobb commissioners scheduled to appoint new police chief

Stuart VanHoozer, a 32-year veteran of the Cobb Police Department who is currently one of two interim police chiefs, is being recommended as the new Cobb Police Chief.Stuart VanHoozer, Cobb Police Chief

His appointment is scheduled for a vote Tuesday by the Cobb Board of Commissioners, which is having a regular meeting starting at 9 a.m.

VanHoozer would succeed Tim Cox, who retired at the end of last year.

VanHoozer and Scott Hamilton, another Cobb Police veteran, have been serving as interim co-chiefs since then.

In his time with Cobb Police, VanHoozer has served as a patrol officer, a field training officer, a narcotics officer, an internal affairs officer, a commander of three precincts and as an executive officer to the Director of the Cobb Department of Public Safety.

Since 2018, VanHoozer has served as a deputy chief.

He earned a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice and public services from Kennesaw State University.

A message from Cobb government Monday morning said that there will be a press conference regarding the police chief appointment after the meeting.

Also on Tuesday’s agenda (you can read it here) will be an update on Truist Park and The Battery.

Cobb commissioners also will be asked to consider spending $975,000 to purchase around 3.5 acres of land on Sewell Mill Road at East Piedmont Road for the relocation of Fire Station 20.

The Cobb Fire Department wants to replace the current station at 1298 Hilton Drive—on Sewell Mill Road between East Piedmont and Old Canton Road—that was built in 1984.

The property for the potential new site is owned by the McCleskey Family-East Cobb YMCA.

Last year commissioners rejected a rezoning request for those parcels to become a residential senior living development.

The meeting starts at 9 a.m. Tuesday in the second floor board room of the Cobb government building (100 Cherokee St., downtown Marietta).

The hearing also will be live-streamed on the county’s website, cable TV channel (Channel 24 on Comcast) and Youtube page. Visit cobbcounty.org/CobbTV for other streaming options.

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PHOTOS: A sweet and savory return of The Taste of East Cobb

Taste of East Cobb returns
Serving up a bowl of chicken penne pasta and garlic bread from Camps Kitchen and Bar.

Food tickets sold for the Taste of East Cobb said the festivities would go on rain or shine, and despite some windy and cloudy skies, a popular community food festival made its return Saturday.

After a two-year hiatus due to COVID, several local restaurants and dozens of small businesses and community organizations met the public at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church.

Organized by the Walton High School Band Parents Association, proceeds benefitted the Walton band programs.

Students from the Walton and Dickerson Middle School bands performed, and there was a silent auction, raffle tickets, a kids zone, martial arts demonstrations and more.

Also on hand were the Committee for East Cobb Cityhood and the East Cobb Alliance, which opposes cityhood, as their representatives were campaigning ahead of the May 24 referendum, as well as the Cobb Democratic and Republican parties.

Taste of East Cobb returns
A face-painting station attracted all ages.
Taste of East Cobb returns

A shrimp roll from Drift Fish House and Oyster Bar didn’t last long.

Taste of East Cobb returns
The Walton Jazz Band performs

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13 Wheeler HS students earn scholarships in AVID program

Wheeler HS AVID students earn scholarships
Wheeler AVID students explain their success to members of the Rotary Club of East Cobb.

The Advancement Via Individual Determination or (AVID) program was started at Wheeler High School in 2017 by the Rotary Club of East Cobb to assist students who are from groups traditionally underrepresented in higher education and/or may become the first members of their families to attend college.

The Cobb County School District announced this week that 13 Wheeler seniors in the current AVID program have been accepted to college and have received more than $5 million in scholarship offers.

In addition to rigorous coursework, AVID students also receive additional academic, social, and emotional support as they prepare for college.

“One of the AVID seniors earned millions in scholarships and another more than $350,000 in scholarships. Two other AVID graduates totaled up $40,000 and $37,000 in scholarship offers,” the district announced in press release.

“After graduating from Wheeler, the AVID students plan to major in sports medicine, political science, biology, forensic science, psychology, chemistry, international business, and more. One is set on being a pediatric surgeon, while another aims for law school.”

The students recently met with Rotary Club members, who have donated more than $60,000 since the program started.

“We all migrated from Nigeria to the U.S. to chase the American dream, student Amblessed said. “It’s a lot of pressure because we traveled all this way, but we have to succeed. I was under a lot of stress.”

AVID teacher Rachel Lewis told the Rotarians that “you are singlehandedly providing them with an opportunity they would not have otherwise had, and I thank you for that.”

AVID began with two students, and reached 90 this year. The district said 67 rising freshmen have already applied to be part of the program in the fall.

“I’m really grateful for every single person and the [Wheeler] program and teaching staff, everyone and all the people that have supported us,” Wheeler senior Ayomide said. “It’s been some of the greatest years of my life.”

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Kell HS student earns $30K ‘For Atlanta’ college scholarship

Kell HS earns For Atlanta scholarship
Kell High School senior Kaelynn Kelly, left, meets singer-songwriter Clairo after an Atlanta concert.

Kaelynn Kelly, a senior at Kell High School, has been awarded a $30,000 college scholarship from the singer-songwriter Clairo.

The base of the “For Atlanta” scholarship was $20,000, and the entertainer added an additional $10,000 with proceeds from merchandise sales at some of her Atlanta performances.

The scholarship was launched with bold.org, which works to reduce student debt, and is open to high school and undergraduate college students from the Atlanta area.

Scholarship applicants were to explain how they’ve overcome obstacles and how Clairo’s music inspired them.

Kelly, who has a twin sister and was was born with cerebral palsy, wrote an essay about her childhood and the physical therapy she still receives, as well as the ankle foot orthosis that she wore for several years:

“Clairo’s song Alewife reminds me and my sister’s relationship. Arelynn was and still is my anchor. In the lyrics, ‘I met you by surprise. You were hangin’ out all the time. But you know you saved me from doin’ something to myself that night.’ It makes me ponder the thought that Arelynn and I were not supposed to be twins and it was a surprise.”

Kelly also was treated to a Clairo concert in Atlanta and back stage visit (photo above).

After graduating from Kell, Kelly is planning to attend Kennesaw State University and study cyber security.

She concluded her essay by saying that physical therapy “is something I will have to do for the rest of my life, and I am okay with that. My cerebral palsy is extremely meaningful to me because it is a part of who I am. My parents helped me understand my potential and assisted me in finding the strength to prove to myself that I am more than just my disorder.”

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